Even in ordinary circumstances, having a roommate can be a tricky scenario. Sharing a living facility with a person you barely know can either result in an experience that will transform two randos into an inseparable unit or elicit eye rolls whenever they cross paths.
It will likely be the latter, however, when one of them starts messing with the other’s fridge content. As u/veggieevengeance recently shared in the Petty Revenge community, this is exactly what happened to her (sans eye rolls) when she noticed her leftovers mysteriously starting to disappear. You’d think it’s quite nice of her to make the meals more nutritious for the tiny person, her roommate’s son, who was secretly feasting on it. But instead, it brought the already boiling tension between two grown-ups to absurd levels.
A 26-year-old woman had enough of her roomie’s kid eating her leftovers, so she started adding veggies to put a stop to it
Image credits: monkeybusiness (not the actual photo)
If anything, making the food healthier stirred up the boiling tension even more
Image credits: Tima Miroshnichenko (not the actual photo)
After the situation didn’t calm down, the author gave a beefy update on what happened next
Image credits: veggieevengeance
Living alone is a luxury fewer and fewer of us will get to experience in our 20s and 30s, it appears. As recently as 2007, almost half of the adult population lived with their spouse. However, various factors such as the decreasing popularity of marriage, skyrocketing student loan debt, and rising housing expenses have contributed to an increase in what we call doubled-up households – a term used to describe homes that include additional adults other than the householder or their partner. And yes, this also includes young people who have no other choice but to live with their parents if they want to save up some cash or not end up completely broke.
Image credits: Emil Kalibradov (not the actual photo)
Census data from 2015 indicates that approximately 25% of Americans aged 18 to 34 lived with roommates, an increase from 23% a decade earlier. Furthermore, a Pew Research Center analysis of census data reveals that nearly 32% of all American adults lived in shared households – almost half of them with non-family housemates – in 2017, marking a dramatic shift from around 29% compared to 1995. Surprisingly, not paying for groceries or stealing food only irks around 7% of roommates, a 2021 survey has shown.
Of course, roommate issues don’t seem that concerning when you realize that one in 10 American households struggle to feed their families, according to the annual food insecurity report by the USDA. The numbers of food insecurity have reached record levels with children in 274,000 American households experiencing hunger, skipping meals, or going without food for entire days due to insufficient funds to purchase food in the past year. In light of these distressing circumstances, then, the inconvenience of having a roommate’s child occasionally nibble at your leftovers seems rather trivial (yet understandably annoying).
Image credits: Markus Spiske (not the actual photo)
Most people couldn’t believe the audacity of the mother
Although, there were some suggestions to be the good samaritan and set some food aside for the family, the OP had a valid reason not to
The post “I Put Veggies In My Food To Stop My Roommate’s Kid From Eating It. Mom Threatens Legal Action” first appeared on Bored Panda.